Past CEMA Events
In the Limelight: Diversity on Stage
April 13 to June 30, 2007
In the Limelight is on display in the Special Collections Department from April 13 through June 30th. Featured are works from CEMA’s growing performing arts collections. This new and fascinating exhibit includes original scripts, photographs, graphic art and collectibles autographed by the likes of Cesar Chavez, Luis Valdez, and Jane Fonda.
On exhibit are works from El Teatro Campesino, considered the most influential Latino theater company in the country. Founded by Luis Valdez, El Teatro Campensino’s first stage was the flatbed of a truck used for the benefit of hardworking laborers in the farmlands of California. The display features a German poster announcing the Teatro’s La Carpa de los Rasquachis. Also included is José Montoya’s silkscreen of Zoot Suit, the first play by a Chicano playwright performed on Broadway.
UCSB alumni and celebrated playwrights Frank Chin (1965) and Philip Kan Gotanda (1974) are also on display. Chin is founder of the Asian American Theater Workshop, and playwright for Chickencoop Chinaman and Year of the Dragon. Gotanda’s Fish Head Soup and Dream of Kitamura are among the plays highlighted.
Genny Lim's Paper Angels tells of the hardship endured by Chinese immigrants during their confinement on Angel Island. Elizabeth Wong’s first draft of The Laundry is a hilarious teleplay for a Seinfeld episode, while her play script China Doll depicts the tumultuous life of Anna May Wong, the first Asian American actress to reach iconoclastic status.
Dan Guerrero’s Gaytino! is an autobiographical comedy that engages the audience through decades of Chicano history and the gay experience from a unique and personal perspective.
Also displayed are historical photographs used by Velina Hasu Houston for her play, Tea, a story about five Japanese war brides, each married to an American soldier of a different race.
Rounding out the exhibit is Sojourner Kinkaid Rolle’s Ayo’s Journey, a multidimensional theater performance about the transatlantic slave trade, based on a 12-poem cycle.
